View Full Version : Fundamental doubt on Acceleration.
PhysicsBegner
Nov25-10, 01:10 AM
Hi Everyone, I have very fundamental question on Acceleration. I can understand that a moving body accelerates or de-accelerate when its velocity goes up and down.
But I couldn't understand; when we say a moving body accelrates or de-accelerates when the direction of moving body changes(with constant velocity). What acceleration literally means here?
I can understand mathematically since velocity is a vector we get acceleration whenever magnitude or direction changes. But I couldn't understand logically what acceleration means here.
Hi Everyone, I have very fundamental question on Acceleration. I can understand that a moving body accelerates or de-accelerate when its velocity goes up and down.
But I couldn't understand; when we say a moving body accelrates or de-accelerates when the direction of moving body changes(with constant velocity). What acceleration literally means here?
I can understand mathematically since velocity is a vector we get acceleration whenever magnitude or direction changes. But I couldn't understand logically what acceleration means here.
Whenever an object changes speed or direction then it feels a force and therefore acceleration, because velocity is a vector quantity. Acceleration in the case you have given, where it has constant speed, means that the force is perpendicular to the velocity of the body, which means it is moving in a circle.
PhysicsBegner
Nov25-10, 04:50 AM
I think u misunderstood only force causes acceleration, No force then no acceleration(newton's first law). My doubt was: if we calculate acceleration of a body moving with a constant velocity in a circle using centripital force then wold it be equal to the acceleration calculated by direction change of velocity.
My doubt was: if we calculate acceleration of a body moving with a constant velocity in a circle using centripital force then wold it be equal to the acceleration calculated by direction change of velocity.
Yes, of course. Those are just two ways of saying the same thing. (I assume you mean a body moving in a circle with constant speed, not constant velocity.)
You can calculate the acceleration of the object as kinematic exercise, getting ac = v^2/r. Applying Newton's 2nd law gives you Fc = mac. It's the same acceleration either way.
HallsofIvy
Nov25-10, 07:40 AM
I think u misunderstood only force causes acceleration, No force then no acceleration(newton's first law). My doubt was: if we calculate acceleration of a body moving with a constant velocity in a circle
As Doc Al implies, this is impossible. To move with a constant velocity means to move at a constant speed in a straight line. "Velocity" is a vector quantity having both magnitude and direction. Change in either magnitude (speed) or direction is an acceleration.
using centripital force then wold it be equal to the acceleration calculated by direction change of velocity.
You are confusing "velocity" and "speed".
PhysicsBegner
Nov25-10, 11:19 PM
Yes, I meant constant speed not velocity. I was confused since some text books use term velocity instead of speed at certain places. And I understand that a body can't travel in circular path with constant velocity.
Thank you.
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